The Other Side of the “Istrian Exodus”: Immigration and Social Restoration in Slovenian Coastal Towns in the 1950s

Authors

  • Aleksej Kalc Slovenian Migration Institute ZRC SAZU, Novi trg 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3986/dd.v0i49.7258

Keywords:

Slovenian coastal region, Istrian exodus, immigration, population replacement, ethnic change,

Abstract

The article addresses the migration processes in the fifteen years after WWII in what is today’s Slovenian coastal region. The main emphasis is on the immigration following the annexation of this area to socialist Yugoslavia in 1954. The replacement of the population, the radical change of the ethnic structure and the geography of the immigration inflow are outlined. Some questions that affected the immigration and repopulation process are discussed and some possibilities for further research are presented, i.e. the policy and management of the migration processes, the inclusion patterns of the newcomers and the relationships among the indigenous and immigrant components.

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Author Biography

Aleksej Kalc, Slovenian Migration Institute ZRC SAZU, Novi trg 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana

PhD in History, Slovenian Migration Institute ZRC SAZU, Novi trg 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana; AKalc@zrc-sazu.s

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Published

2019-02-03

How to Cite

Kalc, A. (2019). The Other Side of the “Istrian Exodus”: Immigration and Social Restoration in Slovenian Coastal Towns in the 1950s. Two Homelands, (49). https://doi.org/10.3986/dd.v0i49.7258

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Section

Articles